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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1920. INCETON STUDENTS CELEBRATE VICTORY OVER YALE—HAUGHTOI WARNS CRIMSON AGAINST OVER-CONFIDENCE—GOOD SCORES ARE MADE ON ALLEYS BY GIRL BOWLERS—BASKETBALL TONIGHT AT STATE ARMORY—PROMOTERS OF DEMPSEY - CARPENTIER BOUT INCORPORATE IN N. Y ————————————————————— ——————————————————————————————————————————— GOOD SCORES | GIRL BOWLERS mond Gets 177 Total in ley Works League Plamond anchor bowler on utes team of the Stanley irls league, turned in a Fiit- nd of pin toppling last night ogers’ Recreation Bullding two games rolled, Miss Dia- lled the timbers for scor i #2. Other bowlers in the 0 bowled In good fashion are Miss Scheyd, 166; Miss 7; Miss Carlson, 162; Miss 1567, and Miss Westman,, 153 Casino alleys, the Kaceys' occupled the alleys. The defeated the KElderber- Loganberries trimmed the and the Raspberries Blackberries 134 AS GOOD mummmmnnflmllillllllllIllllllllml Langren Jummy Dummy Dummy .. Russell D. Fitzpatrick Kiley . N. Cully R. ¢ J. Onarato H. Smith J. Winiry Culley ¢ | playea ¥8 85 52 () 543 Gooseberries. Campbell Clark MeKeon Hickey Kiniry Burns J. Maher Caplan 1. Shea H. Byett F. Krause . Galliger . H » Bugiel Lunstrom . MeAvay Daley Brien Mangan in Mangan s44 Hunt Stocking Ewald Kinakie smith Tratentre Funk Frundel Kirory Livingston ARMY PRACTICES IN SNOW. West Point Eleven Put Through Hard Drill on Wet Gridiron. West Point, N. Y., Army's gridiron warriors. contrary Monday custom, resumed their yestorday although the field was made heavy and treacherous by the wet snow which fell continuously. Except for Breidster and Lou Storck, the big Nov. 16.—The to team was intact as it went into action against the scrubs. AS EVER. Private Seal always occu- pied a place of honor at picnics, on the porch, after the game or outing, at the time of relaxation after a hard day’s work. 2 it with the No reason to change from this old friend now. It is still made of the best ho an infinite care. and malt, still brewed aged with the same Its taste and body-building properties remain unchanged. You liked Private Seal in the past; it is as good as ever Y. Distributors: Miner. Read & Tullock, Ph. Bardeck, New Britain. EIGENSPAN 67 | tor Warns Against Overconfidence PERCY HAUGHTON | OUT WITH CRIMSON i Harvard’s Greatest Football Men- Cambridge, Mass, Nov. 16.—This was an unusually busy Monday for the Harvard 'Varsjty football men, have had no hard drilling since they the Jersey Tigers. With only days between them and their with Yale at New Haven, they started work yesterday In the funda- mentals. There was a session at tackling dummies and later a sig drill for the three tcams which h. been in grooming for tne entirc sca The session started shortly after | o'clock and lasted until dark, There was no scrimmaging, but the 'Varsity and substitutes were sent against each other for a dummy drill Percy Haughton was at Chmbridge who four game the n See THAT GUY OvER THERE BILL ?- weLl HE'S THE INVENTED ; TRAT CAN THOUSAND MINUTE {_/ i@ KiLL Tewn again yesterday The former head coach went to Princeton with the other football adviseis, and he does 10t share with the graduates the idea that Harvard is going to run riot against Yale down in the bowl. Yes- terday before the practice Haughton talked to the team, cautioning them not to be overconfiGent and pointing out some of the strong points in the | New Haven plays. He also went back into history, noting fhe years when Yale, with a team which Harvard ex- pected to beat, notably in 1897, 1899 | and 1910, was able to stave off defeat and finirh in a 0 to 0 tie. There was betting at odds of 10 to 7 and 10 to 6 in Boston yesterday, Harvard, of eourse, being the favorite Down on Farm. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 16.—The | members of the Yale "Varsity were not at the field yesterday afternoon, and will not come down from Gedney Farms were all the players who took ! part in the Princeton game, Tad Jones, Trainer Jack Mack and several sub- stitutes. The other coaches, Dr. Brides, Dr. Bull, Field, Vaughn and Mosely, were at the bowl with the squad this afternoon. The so-called first team lined up as | tollows; Dutton and Shevlin ends: | Munger and Trowbridge, tackles; Cruikshank and Herr, guards; Moore, centre: Dan Kelly, quarterback; Wakelee and Stabeck, halfbacks; Webb, fullback. Egan replaced Shevlin at end for a while. Trippe went in for Cruikshank and Knapp for Stabeck. This eleven had a long scrimmage with Dr. Bull's team and afterward some practice in running back kickoffs. On the scrimmage, the principal work was forward passing and defending against forward passing. The individual star of the scrimmage was Wakelee, who made a 5H0-vard run. He also inter- cepted a forward pass and made touchdown after a 30-vard run. Pt in the scrimmage Dan Kelly kicked a il from the 25-vard line. Herr, guard, recovered fumble lers's Jack Cutler, the intercepted a forward A punt of Saunders’s was blocked and Shevlin picked it up and ran for a touchdown. Dan Kelly made dnother touchdown on a line plunge These three touchdowns were only ones made by the first tea straight play. For the scrubs, Cutler made a touchdown, forward pass Chester J. Laroche, the freshman coach. who came out yesterday to the fleld with the ‘Varsity coaches, was highly complimented on the success of the freshman season, which closed Saturday. His team has come through without a defeat, or a tic score, and with victories over Hotchkiss, Dean Acac Phillips Exeter, Phillips Ar o r and Princeton and Harvard {reshmen. . UP TO LEONARD Lightweight Champion Must a playin A next scrub quarter- of Sau but on the pla back, pass the 1 in Jack taking a Make 135 Pounds at 2 p. m. for Welling Bout, Or Forfeit Title. Willlam Gibson, manager of Benny Leonard, the lightweight champion, into Tex Rickard’s office ves- terday afternoon and laid $10,000 on the desk of the astonished promoter. Whether it was in the form of a certified check, ten one thousand dol- lar bills, or other denomination, may never be known After giving Mr. Rickard a few minutes to regain his composure, Mr. Gibson said: “That money goes as a forfeit guarantee that Benny Leonard will make 135 pounds at 2 p. m. for his bout with Joe Welling in Madison Square Garden November 26." If Leonard fails to make the re- quired weight, Welling will get the $10,000 in addition to his compensa- tion from Rickard and a lambasting from Leonard, provided he consents to box If Welling fails to make the weight he will forfeit only 2,500 to Leonard, with the lambasting still to come. Most the provision of strode to important of all, however, is the state law pro- viding that if a champion fails to make the required weight his title shall be forfeited to his challenger. Therefore, if Benny Leonard fails to make the weight and loses his title and a $10,000 forfeit to Joseph Well- Ing. it s to be feared that Mr. Gib. son’s feelings will be seriously hurt. GUY WITH A PECLLIAR DEA TIGERS’ VICTORYIS | DULY CELEBRATED | Princeton Pays Homage to Great Eleven for Beating Yale Princeton, N. J., Nov. 16.—The his- | oric tower of Old Nassau was light- | »d last night by the biaze of a huge hampionship bonfire, celebrating the Tiger’s successful football season and rarticularly her victory over Yale Saturday. All day the Princeton freshmen had been busy gathering everything ombustible within a radilus of two ' niles from the university campus, ' nd many is the farmer who will miss * his fences or his chicken coop or the ay rack cover in the morning. The pile was centered about the ' cannon.” just back of Old Nassau tself, the spot marking the center of undergraduate activities. The can- non itself is a relic of the Revolu- tionary Battle of Princeton, when it was left dismantled by Continental ar- tillery fire, to fall into the hands of Washington's troo In the century nnd more that it has stood nose down, leep ia its circular gravel bed amid the college lawns, it has felt the | heat of many a victorious fire, but | none more joyous or, more pleasing | to the undergraduates’ pride than that | of last night. | Real Reason for Joy. The flames that lit the ivy-colored walls of the old buildings as brightly | 1s the morning sun and made a slow | n the sky for ten miles around, bore | the tidings that Captain Mike Calla- han's team had defeated Yale the ccond years in succession, for the first time in twenty years. And no more could the New Haven rooters chant their song of “once in seven vears” nor flaunt the fact that Prince- ton had yet to win a game from the ' Blue in her new Palmer stadium. t As soon as classes were dismissed | yesterday noon, roughly dressed mem- bers of 1924 began their systematic ralds of the town. Wise storekeep- ers retired their signs for the day and the old residents removed their detachable doorsteps and bolted tight their shutters, but, even so, many a , landmark of Nassau street will be smouldering in grey ruin in the morn- ing as this line catches the reader’s eye. , Immediate resources being ex- hausted, the freshmen went further afield, and before long decrepit farm wagons and one-horse shays that had outlived their days of utility began to appear under loads of fences and logs. Sometimes these went into the pile but mere often irate .farmers came in during the lull at supper time and rescued the vehicles that were worth saving before the blaze started Even the town water wagon lum- bered gayly across the campus under the care of twenty freshmen, but the local autherities came to its aid be- fore it disappeared under the rapid- ly growing pile, and hauled it back across the lawns amid the hooting of the drawers of wood Students in ke Dance. At 8 o'clock last. evening a huge parade of students gathered behind the band and snaked-danced its way up and down ssau street to the strains of “Yale. Yale, you can’t play BIRD ThAaT A MACHING | aia to Diegnosis. HE'S THAT POI\SON GAS = BOTTLE ©OF IT L PUT A CI\TY OoF A MiLLION PEOPLE To SLeee- THAT'S HiM HE'S ThHE GUY THATS TRYING To PUT OVER SEE& THAT GUY THE FELLOW INVENTED A ? CHAP A PiLL A IN The wouLd No wo BiLi- HELL DON'T - AN ANTt- TOBACCO Bl the campus to the cannon, where Captain Mike, carried forward on the shoulders of hig admiring classmates, applied the torch. The pile, which was a hundred feet across and fifty feet high, burst into a blaze and in ten minutes was a complete mass of flames which lighted up every nook of the campus and drove the spectators back against the walls of West Hall to escape from the heat. The flames lighted up two | big signs, in orange and black paint, which placarded the score of Satur- day’s game to any who might be un- aware of Princeton’s margin of vic- tory. When the blaze was at its height a dummy, dressed in a Yale football outfit, appeared in a window of West Hall and slid down an invisible wire right into the heart of the flames, where the heat touched off the heavy charge of black powder with which it was filled, to the huge glee of the crowd Captain Mike Makes Speech. Captain Callahan was again cap- tured and carried as near as comfort would aliow to the fire, where he was hoisted up on ready shoulders and forced to make a speech. What " CONGRESSP- CAN You BEAT THAT ! THAT FELLOoW CHECK SUIT THAT ELSE Wikl , GET HiMm= "~ The 'S The INVENTED IF DROPPED OCEAN WOULD KLl ALl Tme FISH AND DRY uP THE ENTIRE WORKS LET ME AT Him LET ME Ki\L. HimM--~ No No DON'T) HOLD ME BACK = I'M GoiNnGg To GET Him KEEP QU‘.GT No WO LISTEN® he said was lost in the noise to most of the crowd, but his reception and the after applause were none the less boisterous for thdt.’ Then the other members of the team were brought forth from all parts of the campus. A group of students charged up the stairs of West Hall and brought Don Lourie on their shoulders from the Friends’ room, where he had beén watching the proceedings, while an- other dozen managed to hoist Stanley Keck's huge frame into the light of the fire for a cheer. Before the even- ing was over most of the team had been run down and carried out, to be cheered to the echo, amid the tolling of the bell of Old Nassau. The blaze did not begin to die down until midnight, and about that time the party broke fip and the college went to bed to dream about another ceMbration next November. i DELMONT STOPS HAYES. ' New York, Nov. 16 —After two minutes and forty seconds of fighting in the seventh round, K. O. Phil Del- mont knocked out Johnny Hayes at the’ Star 8. C. last night. Delmont dazed his adversary with a left hook to the jaw and then brought over a short right to the same place. { latter blow ended the bout. SILENT FIVE T0 PLAY Famous Quintet of Mutes Will Oppoese Kaccy Team Tonight at State A mory—Girls Teams in Preliminary.. Two games of basketball are sched- uled tonight at the State Armory, when the Kaceys will tackle the Si- lent Five, an aggregation from the American School for Deaf, at Hart- ford. The mutes have long: been known for their brilliancy at tkis indoor sport, and may be relied.on to force the Kaceys to top speed for victory. Cossette, a member of.the Corbin team of the Industrial league, will play with the visiting team to- night. His mates will consist of the following: Captain Hariris, Kelly, Szo- pa, Rockwell, Skinner and Spring. The first game of the night will be between the Outlaws and a girls team from the Corbin factory. Following ' the contests, dancing will be enjoyed. May's orchestra will furnish the mu. The FREE TO T -l Maxing an A-ray examination of the Zungs, with improved Magnoathis Skiascope as an: This and other wonderful methods of examinations are Free to all who call on him at Hotel Beloin, Wednesday, Nov. 17th. Hours from 10 a.m. 10 5:30 p. m, FREE FOR THIS VISIT Never before has such an opportunity been given the sick of this vicinity, and 1f you should rot fail to take alvantage of i1t. The sick multitudes crowd his offices from morning till night, and at HE A Remarkabie Offer made to the Sick for this . SICK | ] 4 Visit only, by Dr.NAUGHTON New England’s Wonderful Specialist —WHO WILL BE AT— " Hotel Beloin To all who call on him at Disease, Wonderful “X-Ray” NEW BRITAIN ONE DAY ONLY WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17th Beloin Hotel, Wednesday, Nov. 17th Dr. Naughton will give his Oonsultations, Remarkablc 1-agnosis uf Examinations, all Medical Services, Surgical and Office Treatments Absolutely Free of Charge. are suffering, Yyou svery visii the young. the old, the rich, the poor, all apply to Dr. Naughton for relief, so those wishing to see 2nd coffice hours of his visit and call early to avoid the crowded last hours him should remember the day, dates Are You Sick? Are You Suf- fering? If So Call on Him and Take Advantage of His Skill and Experience. The rapidity with which he de- scribes all diseases is truly wonderful and astonishes all who cali upon him; and his extensive practical experi- ence enables him to determine Doctor Naughton will whether a case is curable or whether it is incurabie. Not only will you be surZrised at his wonderful knowledge of diseass. his pl‘.ln. concise explanation of cause and effect. but at the marvelous rapidity with which his common sense, raticzay treatment goes to the seat of | the trouble; giving relief, and in all cases that have not progressed too far, a cure. positively be at Hotel Beloin, DON’T WAIT ! The sick multitndes crowd his of- fices from morning until night, and if you would avoid disappointment you should call early. Dr. Naughton makes regular visits to New Britaln from time to time to persorally attend te his many patients who are unable te visit his Worcester offices. Wednesday, Nov. 17th, from 10 o’clock in the morning until 5:30 o’clock in the evening, to consult with and examine all cases personally. P. AUGHT MENTS, x D *